Career Tip 5: Find a Coach – What Headhunters and Company Recruiters Won’t Tell You
What Headhunters and Company Recruiters Won’t Tell You
The Job Dog often has clients who want to get beyond the cliché feedback from a recruiter that other candidates were more qualified. Here is what you need to know about the truth behind that statement.
The Facts
The recruiter does not have the time—or, many times, the willingness—to give you honest and candid feedback. Even if a recruiter tells you something, is it everything? Is it what you truly need to hear? Is it completely honest? Likely not.
- It is not the recruiter’s job to be candid with you; in fact, there are potential legal repercussions if she says much of anything.
- Do not believe the reason you did not get the job is always based upon qualifications; there may be other factors.
The Need
You need honest feedback. If you are overlooking a single factor or issue that is keeping you (and may continue to keep you) from getting job offers, you need someone to tell you what that is. You need someone to give you real feedback about why you were not selected.
Who
Someone 1) whose expertise you value and 2) who will give you candid answers. Now is the time to meet with that individual—before you lose another job offer. When selecting a mentor/coach who can do this for you, consider two factors: his/her expertise and his/her willingness to be candid.
- Expertise – Select a person who has specific knowledge or expertise. This will be someone you respect. When he/she speaks, you are confident the advice is valuable. You take that advice to heart. You don’t have to agree, but you should listen and accept her thoughts as being likely more right than you may want to initially accept.
- Candor – Also, consider if this person is likely to care enough about you and your situation that he will be honest. He needs enough of a caring attitude, even tough love, that he will tell you what is on his mind even though he knows it may be difficult to hear.
Considering an outside perspective about your career history and how you present yourself prevents you from overlooking what may be obvious to others. Your mind has an infinite capacity to deceive itself. For example:
- You are repeating the same patterns and expecting different results.
- You are remaining within your comfort zone, yet want to achieve maximized career-transition results.
Feedback, at this stage of the process, is vitally important to ensure you don’t fumble a series of interviews because you repeated the same mistakes.
The Nature of Candid Feedback:
“He has the right to criticize who has the heart to help.”
– Abraham Lincoln
The Nature of Candid Feedback:
“He has the right to criticize who has the heart to help.”
– Abraham Lincoln
Considering an outside perspective about your career history and how you present yourself prevents you from overlooking what may be obvious to others. Your mind has an infinite capacity to deceive itself. For example:
- You are repeating the same patterns and expecting different results.
- You are remaining within your comfort zone, yet want to achieve maximized career-transition results.
Feedback, at this stage of the process, is vitally important to ensure you don’t fumble a series of interviews because you repeated the same mistakes.
On the Positive
Our clients often overlook or minimize the skills or potential that others see in them. “You are great at …” or “I’d hire you because …” are affirming facts that you also need to hear. Yes, your feedback provider should also be helping you identify and reinforce statements about what you do well.
Therefore, feedback can be pro or con, positive or negative, or even conveyed as “do more of … and less of …” Feedback from a competent and candid person you trust moves you from where you are to where you can be.
Recommended Reading or Listening
Time-tested, trusted advice for job hunters and career changers.
–The Job Dog